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Thief In The House Of Memory, A
 
 

Thief In The House Of Memory, A [Paperback]

Tim Wynne-jones


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Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $8.95  
Paperback, Aug 16 2004 --  

Product Details

  • Paperback: 180 pages
  • Publisher: Groundwood (Aug 16 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0888995741
  • ISBN-13: 978-0888995742
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 14 x 1.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 159 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #969,880 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Books in Canada

All the ingredients for what may well be a gothic murder mystery are in place in this page-turner for young adults by two-time G-G winner, Tim Wynne-Jones: the body that is found in the abandoned, ancestral mansion; the persistent suspicions that a murder took place; and the surprising twists as the reader nears the end. Tim Wynne-Jones, however, eschews the murder mystery formula in order to achieve something entirely different, a novel of suspense that examines memory as a central theme in the shaping of experience.
Declan Steeple is a bright16-year old whose memories of his absent mother return to him as vivid re-creations of his childhood past. He longs to find the truth about his missing mother who abandoned the family when he was ten. Did she really leave, as his father claims, and why? Is she alive and, if so, where is she?
When Declan and his 6-year-old sister discover the body of a would-be thief in the estate known as Steeple Hall, his mother’s character and her tattered past become intertwined with his attempt to solve both the puzzle of her disappearance and the death of the burglar. His father, Bernard, sole inheritor of the Steeple fortune and committed to preserving the past as it is, stifles his attempts.
Steeple Hall, the ancestral home for generations of the Steeple family, is the book’s House of Memory. It evokes comparisons, as one of Declan’s classmates says, to Poe’s House of Usher. After Declan’s mother leaves the family, his father builds a smaller, more modest house down the hill from the mansion for his children and Birdie, their new “mother.” However, Steeple Hall is not entirely abandoned by them. It is lovingly maintained by Bernard (whose passion for history has him building a scale model replica of the Canadians landing at Juno Beach on D-Day) as a museum to the Steeple name, a place to store the past. For Declan the old mansion is also a link to the past and he makes regular visits to his former home and bedroom in order to relive memories of his mother.
With the help of Ezra, a school friend who serves as a foil for his ideas and suspicions, Declan discovers that his mother’s past is as tainted as Bernard and Birdie’s coverup of the truth. In the House of Memory he learns that “the past is what happens when the present has no future in it.” He also realizes by the end of the novel that when one world ends, there’s another one about to begin. The ambiguity of who really is the thief in the House of Memory deepens as the story unfolds. Figuratively, there are several. And inasmuch as the house is a memory-maker for Declan, helping to reconstruct his mother’s past, it also liberates the truth that makes the present bearable for everyone at Steeple Hall.
Such is the writing skill of Tim Wynne-Jones that an adolescent reader will recognize in A Thief in the House of Memory that a good story, a story that hums with the dynamics of human relationships, gets told through character and theme as much as it reveals itself through a well-constructed plot. That same reader will also appreciate the fast-paced, sturdy writing of an author who paints his scenes with images equally as well as he furnishes his House of Memory with ideas worth thinking about.
Antony Di Nardo (Books in Canada)

From School Library Journal

Starred Review. Grade 7-10–Six years ago, when Declan Steeple was 10 and his sister was just a baby, his mother, Lindy, disappeared, searching for something better than the dusty family estate with its generations of clutter and memory. Now the Steeples live in a modern split-level down the hill from the Big House, but the mansion is still there, filled with a past that hides secrets. When a local man is found dead in the house, memories of Lindy and her unhappiness living there suddenly become a pressing weight on Dec, compounded by the fact that he and his sister were the ones to discover the body. The teen feels lost and suspicious; his father seems to be hiding something and Dec realizes how much has never been discussed. This is a beautifully written novel, slim and surprising but ultimately satisfying. Declan's vivid memories and conversations with his father and his friend Ezra bring the pain of his abandonment, and the strength of his determination to move on, vividly to life. Declan's other friends, especially the creative and quirky Viv, appear only briefly but have enough character to bring them to life and to illuminate the protagonist. The dreams and memories that haunt Declan sometimes seem almost fantastic, but overall this is a realistic and moving story. Given that it focuses on an internal journey, this rich and rewarding novel will appeal most to thoughtful readers who appreciate a sad and bittersweet read.–Karyn N. Silverman, Elizabeth Irwin High School, New York City
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Journey Though a Teenager's Thoughts, May 17 2006
By Teen Reviewer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Thief in the House of Memory (Hardcover)
A Thief in the House of Memory is a young adult book that is one of those books that would almost make a better movie. It's an incredibility well written story and follows a teenager who changes his mind about people that he interacts with all the time. Through the way the author wrote the book, my idea of the characters changed as well. Tim Wynne-Jones grabbed my emotions by changing my approach and assumptions of the other characters and himself. It jumps around from the present time to past memories which make the book contrasting but often confusing. It can get confusing at first for a reader so I advise you to read slowly and carefully to follow the book correctly. I did find it very interesting because it was from a teenager's prospective which made it out of the ordinary from books I have read before. I would suggest it to anyone who has time to sit down, have patience, and follow the book!
The book is about a young teenager named Dec who has a lot to live up to. He is a descendent from a long line of famous governors, but his father, Mr. Steeple broke that chain of politics after being abandoned by his wife. This hurt Mr. Steeple as much as it hurt his young son and infant daughter. They had had everything in their life, money, friends, and power, or so they thought. But as we learn though Dec's memories throughout the book, that isn't enough for a family to function. After years of fighting, Lindy, Dec's mother, had had it. She stole a car and ran from her flawless family; she just couldn't stand appearing to be perfect. Leaving a broken family that realized a family can't be bought, it has to be worked for and built on a foundation of trust and love.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mysterious Musings, Aug 21 2006
By Linda A. Joseph "Give me a DEAR day!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Thief in the House of Memory (Hardcover)
Dec is a great narrator - totally reliable for a teen. The story is short and would probably qualify as "high interest" for lower level or on-level 9th graders. There was a twist or two that I did not see coming, which makes the book a good choice for serious readers as well. The best part about the book, however, is the conglomeration of friends Dec has at school. This is a group of high achievers who consider rationalizing a teacher out of existence, or spending a day without using any words with "O" in them is fun - where do they really come from? I would recommend this book for teachers and students.

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A thought-provoking mystery about complex relationships, Jun 8 2005
By Teenreads.com - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Thief in the House of Memory (Hardcover)
Sixteen-year-old Declan Steeple hasn't seen his free-spirited mother Lindy in six years. His father Bernard has moved on with his life, creating a new family with his girlfriend Birdie and Dec's little sister Sunny. Bernard is content with his life in the present while pursuing his hobby building miniature models of famous battles in history. Dec would rather just face the future when he could leave his family's home and perhaps pursue a career in architecture.

Then one day, Dec and Sunny come across the body of a mysterious intruder in Steeple Hall, his father's family home where Dec had spent his early childhood years before Lindy left. Dec briefly met the intruder when he hitched a ride from him a few weeks before and thinks that because he accidentally mentioned a secret road leading to the old house, this prompted the man to take a chance at burglary. When Sunny mentions that a bust of Plato was placed on a side table instead of by the fallen bookshelf where it once sat, Dec begins to think that something far more sinister has taken place.

The mysterious death causes Dec to begin having visions of his mother as he remembered her when he was a young child: Lindy being dressed as Wonder Woman, Lindy and Dec playing hide-and-seek with a frustrated Bernard, and Lindy telling a young Dec to rescue her from the manor. The visions are hazy and surreal, making Dec wonder if they are really memories or just dreams. He decides to ask Bernard and Birdie questions about Lindy, but they're unwilling to reveal many details especially as to why Lindy left. Frustrated, Dec seeks refuge in Steeple Hall and confides in his best friend Ezra, a quirky science geek who helps him make sense of the bizarre visions.

As time goes by, Dec slowly pieces together the confusing puzzle of visions. What the puzzle reveals to Dec changes everything he thought he knew once again. There are revelations about his family, Lindy's disappearance, and the mysterious dead intruder. THE THIEF IN THE HOUSE OF MEMORY is a mystery that portrays the complexities of friendships and family, while set against the backdrop of a house harboring mysteries of its own. It's a book that is sure to be pleasantly thought-provoking for readers.
[...]
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 4 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 

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